Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 12 Oct 1883, p. 2

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EARTHQUAKE HORRORS- Graphic Story ef a. Survivor at Cusamlc- c1olaâ€"M1raculous Escapeâ€"A Thrlu- lng Experience. A Boston woman who escaped as if ly miracle from the earthquake at Casamicciola writes the following account to her friends in that city. For personal reason, the name of her husband is changed to John. Parts of _the epistle are as follows : It is more than a week since I Wrote my last letter, which has Without doubt filled you with sad apprehensions, and I feel that I ought not to leave you longer without news of me. Still, I hardly feel able to write, for I feel stupefied by this dreadful event. I have hardly the courage to revive in my mind its horrors by repeating them, or, rather, by attempting to repeat them. I doubt if I shall ever be able to make you understand how terrible it “as till I have seen you, and, perhaps, not then, for an earthquake is one of those things that baflle deggvx‘iption. _ We had been in Casamicciula six days, ar- l‘lvmg there on Monday, and on Saturday evening, the 28th of July, at 9.30, was the catastrophe. Saturday morning, when I awoke. I did not feel quite well. I had a nervous headache. The weather was beauti- iulâ€"so beautiful that everyone remarked it. The air was so clear and transparent and so light that sounds that came up to us from the valley below seemed changed into notes of music. Many times that morning I Went to the balcony and looked around on that lovely scene and Wished you could see this beautiful place. My head continued to ache, and after breakfast, at 12 o’clock, I had to give up and go to bed. I remained there till 3. Then 1 got up, but did not dress myself, saying I did not feel able to go to dinner. It was this indisposition of mine which saved ourlives. John, who was suffering with toothache, was glad enough to join me in our little parlor that looked over the beautiful valley toward the moun- tains. We dined at half-past 6. Then I walked up and down the piazza in front of our windows, John reading his papers. Everybody was in the dining-room dining. The dinner was at half-past 7. There was to be music in the parlors, and everyone was gay and gayly dressed. LWhen the first sounds of music came up 1 felt lonely and wished that I had gone down, notwithstand- ing my headache. If I had, I should not be writing you this sad story. for all that gay company were killed. ’1 ‘11 When the night came on, John called me to come in, fearing the evening air. It was then almom 9. I said I felt so ill I should go to bed. He begged me not to go so early, saying the night would be so long and tedious. He said he would play a few games of tricks first. We accordingly sat down on the sofa in front of the chimney, taking the board on our knees, and began the game. We played through the half hour that brought us to the terrible moment, LITTLE THINKING THAT DEATH WAS so NEAR to us, reaching out With his terrible arms to- wards us, and preparing to fold in his cold embrace almost everybody about us. I can never tell you What followed. It commenced like the most terrible thunder. Then everything swayed back- ward and forward, as if swayed by the Wind. Walls fell in With a crash like t: 11 thousand thunders. The mountains opened, sending forth flames of fire, rolling down with the tumbling houses toward the valley, while the valley in its turn exploded, sending everything into chaos. Not one house was left standing. In the midst of this dreadful noise wild shrieks ; then came dark- ness and the silence of the grave. The noise lasted only a few seconds, and the silence a few more, which seemed an eternity. Then the smoke began to clear away, and the terrible cries of the wounded and dying filled the air as if truly coming from the bowels of the earth. Oh, how little this gives you an idea of what passed. When the Sound first began John knew what it was, and said : “Great God, an earthquake.” With one bound we reached the window- way, it being considered the safest place, which proved true. Had we remained sitting we should have been instantly killed. A falling wall enveloped the sofa where we sat. The whole world seemed dissolving around me. I had no hope of life from the first sound, and I turned my thoughts heavenward. It was not till I heard the dreadful cries of the wounded and dying that I trembled with fear thinking of the suffering which my poor body might endure before 1 should reach the other side. But I did not lose courage, and prayed for strength to help me through. Heaven did not seem ve' y far off. THE DARKNESS WAS STILL so GREAT that we could not see whether the floor had been carried away, or whether the wall where we were standing alone remained. \Ve must find a light. John remembered that there were matches on a. little tible near, and so, feeling with his feet, he took a. few steps into the room and found them, lighted one, and with its flickering light we looked about us. The parlor where we had been was mostly destroyed. The bedroom was still standing, although torn and separating into a. thousand pieces. The floor was ap- parently good. We entered cautiously, took a shawl for me and a coat for him, and a. package of candles to give us the light neces- sary for finding our way out of this destruc- tion. We went out by the Window where we had stood on to the piazza, which was also partially destroyed. lifter the shock John said : “ We will try and save ourselves out of this rain, before thc repetition shall come.” (There are always thiee shocks in an earthquake.) This piazza. was on the second story with a. flight of stairs on each end leading to the piazza below. We turned to the left. it being a little nearer that way, but soon found our way cut OE. All was in ruin, and from that ruin came a. voice calling to us in English : “ Save me ; I am dying. ’ It was an American girl, a. Miss Van Allen, who was there for treatment of the rheumatism. I had to answer back over that terrible gulf : “ \Ve can not reach you.“ She died. \Ve turned back, passing our windows, then on to the other end of the piazza. There also was ruin, only a portion of the stairs remained standing, and. that portion ready to fall. But it was our only way out. \Ve pasaed ; how I can not tell. HANGING ON THE BROKEN l-‘RAUMENTS and clinging to each other, we at last reach- ed tl~e floor below, Where we found, after much diificulty, the door leading to the road, Feeling that here we should be safe, we hurried on, climbing over mountains of stones. and arrived at last outside the door where the space was just large enough for a. small carriage to turn amund in. We could go no farther. The narrow little road lead- ing around the mountain side to a. small opening called Calvary had been carried away, with all the houses on the side of the mountain higher up down into the valley below. In the darkness, lighted only by the feeble light of the candle, we could see nothing but a dark gulf filled with fallen houses, trees, and rocks, out of which came cries that broke one’s heart. On the other side of this space where we were, was a high wall, twenty feet from the road, filled all full of great openings. Behind us was the angle of the hotel which remained standing. 0n the fourth side the road had opened wide, and to the bottom of this opening no one had courage to look, for it looked likea. great grave, ours perhaps. After a little time five others found their way to this place. Half naked, wounded, and suffering they came, but without murmuring, only too thankful for this comparative safety. Cold and trembling we huddled together, embracing each other who were strangers only an hour before, and silently praying. We remained like this till nearly 3 o’clock, five long hours. Then the angle of the hotel took fire and our position became again very danger- ous. John said we must make an effort to get across the space that divided as from the little opening called Calvary, of which I have already spoken, feeling sure that there where we were death awaited us. We do- cided to make the effort. So we left this place, where we had hoped to remain till daylight should aid us to find our way out. The wounded ones had no alternative but to remain. We started, followed by two ladies and a man-servant who carried a candle. Climbing, slipping, falling, cling- ing, grasping at stones that did not hold but went rolling into the darkness below, at times buried in the soft earth nearly to our middles, we STRUGGLED FOR LIFE FOR A HALF HOUR. We arrived at last at this Calvary ; Calvary indeed ! What a scene, lighted by a. great fire made by the fallen trees and the doors of the ruined housesâ€"their houses ! Almost stunned, though Wounded and fleeing, were children without parents, parents without children, broken, bruised, and bleeding ! Oh, it is not possible to describe it 1 One only of these many scenes would break one’s heart to see. I almost wished for a wound or ache that would absorb my mind and pre- vent my mental agony. But I was without a. scratch. But one touching incident, only one, I will try to tell, because if I should try to tell you all I saw heartrending I should never finish. There was a handsome young man, about 24 or 25 years of age, a peasant, who, when he heard the shock, got his 3 months’ old baby in his arms, and with his young wife tried to escape from a falling house. Buried in the debris, but still protecting his baby, he struggled on, leading his wife. At last she fell. A great stone rolled over and buried her. He struggled on, and faint, bruised, and bleeding, reached the place called Calvary, holding in his arms his baby, unhurt, but crying pitifully. During the long hours of that fearful night he tried to console and hush its crying, not thinking once of himself and his bleeding wounds. When I saw him at 3 o‘clock he sat by the great fire with it in his arms, swaying back- ward and forward, singing softly a. singing that was by far sadder than any crying. The baby’s dear little face and white night- gown were all bathed in the blood that flowed freely from it father’s wounds. \Vorn out at last, the little one slept. He passed it, without a word, into the arms of a poor woman whose husband and seven children had, in that dreadful moment, passed from this world to the other, and whose tearless eyes alone showed the imensity of her agony. The poor young man could not yet feel his bodily pains, but threw himself on the ground, crying : “ My wife, my poor wife.” In the midst of this sad group, also seated on the ground, we awaited daylight. Slowly it came, as if it was afraid to open the Windows of light on such a dreadful day. \Ve were still a. long way from the sea, and had to cross all the ruined town, but by this way alone could we leave the place. With misgivings we left and began the descent. \Vhat we went through during this painful march to the sea is impossible to relateâ€"over mountains of stone, over fallen walls, the way strewn with the wounded, dying, and dead. \Ve were four when we left Calvary. The other two were left behind about half way. 1 have not heard from them since, and they are probably dead. Arriving at the wharf we toer the first boat leaving. It was then 6 in the morning, and we reach- ed Naples at half-past S. One of those good, old-fashioned fathers â€"â€"born and reared on a. farm, but Willing to see his children live an easier lifeâ€"came down to “York” the other day to see about getting his son into a bank. He went to a friend and the friend sent him to the cashier, and the cashier said : “ Is your son quick at figures?’ “ Tolerably quick.” “ Is he ambitious?" “ Yes ; he wants to get on.” “ Is he a hard worker ‘3" “Well, Moses kin mow his three acres of grass per day.” “ does he prefer a. bank to a store ? “ I swan ! I never asked him why, but I guess it’s because he thinks there’s a better chance to climb up. Moses is right on the climb.” “He is perfectly honest of course '1” “ Well, now, that’s the only weak point Moses has got, and I was going to say to you if you took him in that if you keep a wire fence between Moses and any money lying around loose, and if you have a rule agin hoes-trading, and if you don’t allow shaking dice or card~playing, and if he will keep sober, Moses will make one of the most tre- mendous bankers this country ever saw 1"â€" Wall Street A’ews. Influenced by a temperance leader, a rich Epglish miller has destroyed a. cellar of port wme. It has been discovered by a Boston man that the human body would float like a. duck's, were it not for the legs. ‘ Had 3. Weak Pomt. Having been fortunate enough to secure a pound or two of pure, fragrant, unadulterat- ed tea, we must see that it is kept in an air- tight canister. If it be nnt so kept the tea. will lose ltscrispness and flavor by absorbing moisture to some extent from the surround- ing atmosphere and by yialding up its vola. tale oil. The tea-kettle should be kept scrupulous- ly clean, both inside and out. “We can not expect to make good tea from water boiled in a kettle that is barked inside with lime or other deposit, and outside with soot. A dirty kettle proves the servant to be a. slut, and darkly hints at carelessness in the mis- tress. The water should be soft. There is no- thing to beat rain water that has been kept under ground in large tanks. The Water should be filtered. The fire over which a. tea-kettle boils ought to be as free from smoke as possible, otherwise it is not impossible that the water may partake of the flavor of peat or burning coals and the tea be spelled. Before the Water has come to the boil the tea-pot should be well-warmed and the tea. put in. It may then stand for a short time on the hob until the water boils, whenâ€"- The tea should at once be made. \Ve heat the tea-pot in order to conserve all the caloric in the boiling water. \Ve make the tea as soon as the water comes to the boil because good tea. can only be made with freshly-boiling water, not boiling water that has been boiled before or has been kept boiling too long. Boiled water is flat be- cause it is nonaerated, that is the “ why and the wherefore.” Servants want to be drilled to this, or their heads drilled and the truth rammed into them. A worse fault than even this is making tea with water that has gone off the boil, which servants often do. Carbonate of soda should never be used to draw the tea. It; is best, we think (but we sit subject to contradiction), to pour on all the water that is Wanted, for the first cup at all events, at once, and not to merely wet the tea, as it is popularly called. It is a. mistake to add fresh tea to that which has already been made by way of get- ting stronger, and yet we constantly hear the remark made, “ Put a little more tea in the pot.” If more tea or stronger tea. is wanted, it ought to be made in another tea.- pot, and a. spare one often comes in handy. A teapot ought to contain enough tea. to go all round the company once. at least; the habit of half-filling all the cups, then adding boiling water and completing the work, 13 obigctionablq, not to say_stingy. Urns may be used. and some of them look very nice on the table ; but water should be boiling and the urn itself must previously have been well dusted. What is the best kind of teapot? There is a. difference of opinion about this. For our part we like the old-fashioned brown earthenware one, provided it holds enough. Next comes the silver teapot, which some prefer. White china. teapots are also good. But in whatever teapot the tea. is made, it ought to be clean and pretty new; an old teapot gets bad in the enamel, or lined with deposit. An old clay pipe, perhaps, but a new tea- pot I Invalids and people with delicate stomachs (and everybody else for that matter) ought to he most careful to obtain tea of a superior excellence and quite free from facing and udulteration, and ought to attend rigidly to the plan of making a cup of good tea which we have just been endeavoring to explain. The invalid should never on any account drink green or scented tea. The tea he is to drink, after having been infused for the proper time, say five minutes, should be poured off the leaves into a. well-heated, clean teapot, and served in that, covered by the cozy, if there be one about. â€" How long should tea. draw? an three minutes to seven, according to the kind of tea and the character of the water. "Is that dog mad_?” he asked the boy as the animal dashed by. “I reckon he is,” re- plied the boy “I just see a butcher take a. piece 0’ mentaway from him and kick him six feet into the air.” The proprlemrs of the ’FAnM, FIELD AND FIRESXDE. bring: desirous of having lilicir already well- known and popular Agricultural and Family paper more widely circulated and Introduce? into houses where it is not already known, have determined to throw off all prom; this year. and 1!; addition use a portion of their capital for the sole purpose of increasing their circulation to | 00,000 copies. I‘m-circulation is now 65,009. Only 35,000 more needed before the distribution takes Elace. After deciding to more exten~ sivcly a vel‘tise than ever before, the following plan has been adopted y us: We will entér yourfime on our subscription book and mail the FARM , FIELD AND 5 Res“): regu- ta you for Six Months and immediately send a. printed numbered Receipt, whlc will entitle the 1311 11011er to one of the following Presents to be given away at our THA N KS 0 IV I N G FESTIVAL. $4M") 'flffiEsflils GWEwAY: This Ofier Good Till Thanksgiving Day Only. Read These Testimonials. $5000 00 1000 Pocket Silver Fruit Knives 5000 00 1000 Gents’ Pocket Knives. 1000 00 1000 U. S. Greenbacks of $1 1000 00 10 Gents’ Gold Watches, Eng 800 00 10 Ladies’ Gold Wntches. Eng! .11 Movem’t 600 C 200 00 ' ilver \Vatclxes. Americh Move‘t 200 c 5 U. S. Government Bonds of $1000 10 U. S. Greenhncks of 500. 0 U. l M S. Groonbacks of 100. utched pair of Trotting I 015 1 Grand Squm'o Piano. .. 1 Grand Cabinet 01' ‘ 1 leemseac Rooku“ y. 200 00 10 Diamond Finger Rm 5 1 Silver Ilium: 100 00 8 Patel L Harvesters. 5 Top Buggie. 1000 00 1 Normandy Work Horse. 20 U. S. Gm vnbn 1000 00 2500 Elegantoleogra 'nh Picmr 1000 Photograph Albums 82 e 2000 00 6 Raw Silk Parlor. uit Furnltlne 1000 a 2 Village Carts.. .. 200 00 1400 Gold Finger Rings, Ladies’ Breast Pins, 1 Pony Phaeton. . . 100 00 , Gents‘Scarr Pins, Lockets,ans and Chains. And 92,935 other presents valued from 25 cents to $1,00Y which makes a grand aggregation of 100.000 pres enltgz fining; gunmmvelng 9. pggs‘enl‘. gm nd bscriber who sends us 50 Ct as directed .n mum...“ v“. “Amman... m. nf Hm was” LU! ma; muuuu uuuaLlAplxuu. um. my”,an uvmm.bu.w your future Ml‘nnnsze. as we lx-lieve you wlll like our paper 53 Sell tha‘i you will a‘l’nfiii: {'emniu a; Allficri‘tk}? éGRIPTION FREE Get five of your fnends to join .Vuu by cutting this out am! showing it to 1 send yolle’ the FARM, FIELD AND Ellyn-:5le for 51x months, and . . . t . a 01" SL011]: SUB t em. Send us $2.50 and \\ e w r ur subsc ‘ Partial List‘of Presents to Be Given Away. um: mum guiuuuu'clug u pxcacAJv W um,“ “um v “a, nu" nun- - ‘ v- v... w r W N All of the shove presents will be awarded in a mi and impartial manner hf committee chosen at the Festi- val by the Subscribers; ihi festival will take, place without fall. In wil not. he necessary for Subscribers to attend the Festival, as pm ls will be sent: to any part of the United States 01‘ Canada. Yet- it is to be ht)de as many will be present nspossl )le. TIâ€"IE 50 CENTS which you send us is the I‘ee‘ular rice for Si; Momhs’ linhscriptiun. x‘ln‘tl l 'l' 1 1 1 r the n- «0an ‘ OH R PROFIT will 6 in w ,m: pm- r. uujnucl cu wumpu le cmvu u“. aunovl‘uun n w... v. W”. - . SEND TEN sunscnlnnns with $5 and we will 30nd | 2 511 so! intro and twelve numbered receipfs. We shall limit the number of new subscriptions to 100,000, so we would advise all our friends to forward wbv scriptions early. THE FARM, FIELD AND FERESIDE is one o! the oldest and nblest edited Family and Agricultural papers. It comalns twenty large pages (Eighty Columns). includingelegant cover, bound, stitched and cut. And 119w us a. cii‘clil,ition of 65,000 copies, and we are sure to reach \lio [00,000 at. the time set, and the distnbulion of presents W111 take place on thatdate. It contains Storles. Sketches. Poetry, Farm, Garden. Household and Agrlcultural Departments hy the best Contributors of the day, us we-1 as an Illustrated Fashion Department, Needle and Embroidery Work. Illustl‘utinnsof diflemntpqrts ofthe UNITED STATES and Bi apical Sketches of Eminent Men and Women. In short, It contains that which will interest, inslrl and amuse the whole fm ' ' T E PROERfl-Z'IEORQ a csm tlialmd um ens they n 11.1 'v don ‘ ' ) the " i W, and our p ul’ler ‘ ' .. ._ M a er is long ke. ubuuulbuk’u mm x mnuw, .» .u. mum,“ .W “W. 'O HOSE WHO DO NOT ATT V [Rams-and all l‘resmls will be forwarded to Holders of Receipls as llmyl . ' «a this Plvirnnt and beautiful pnpcr, send for 0. Sample Copy which \vll ! m- Sent .L . V0 0 N secures the FA Elli/I, F‘IJ‘ML it) ch FIIFLESIDE SIX Months, andn numbered receipt. The paper is worth double the subscription price. As ta our rdia‘n’ll‘h/ we refer Mme u-ha via not know us fa any Trywl mu l‘rrh‘mhl'r in (Mir/ma. Money in sums of $1.00 orloss may he sontin ordinary letter at our risk, larger sums should be sent; by Registered Le-tmr, P. 0. money order or Express. (Mention This Paper. r EMEMBER these are Presents to our Subscribers glven to them absolutely Free. Out thls out and show to friends, acqual ntancea and nelgh bors, as It will not ap- pear again, and Is the last ogportunlty you will have to take advantage of this ex- traordlnarr offer. Two-cent ostage Stamps taken in sums less than $1.00. mm L . n of the If you have not seen The FARM, FIELD AND FIRESIDE, 89 Randolph Street, Chicago, Ill. now to Make Ideal Tea. FOR 50 CENTS IOO<Q> Alaska’s Burial Customs. The dead body is laid on legs or sticks of timber raised a couple of feet from the ground and then covered in with other tim- her and stones, giving the whole structure somewhat the appearance of a square pen or pile, With upright posts or sticks at the angles. On these funeral piles are placed one or more mementoes of the departed, generally some implement or weapon used by the dead man or woman in lifetime; in the case of a hunter, the weapon in the use of which he excelled. Upon one mausoleum 1 saw arifle, bidarka, seine, spears, arrows, darts, etc. ; and upon the bier of a female was placed a kantag, a wooden bo N1 or dish used to contain food. Such articles are re- ligiously devoted to this purpose, even though they are all the property left by the deceased. A widow may be in want and a son Without a rifle or a seine with which to procure subsistence, but the burial customs of the tribe must not be neglected. These mementoes are never disturbed by the super- stitious natives, but, left to bleach and rust through the Arctic seasons. gradually go to decay. The wooden parts of the funeral pile rot away, leaving the bones of the dead exposed to view, I saw one such case, where the grinning skull looked out between the cracxs of its crumbling prison, seeming to invite raids of the bone-sharp. But the bodies of the dead are not always treated with considera- tion. Sometimes they are rudely thrown out upon the tundra and left to be destroyed by dogs or wolves. A case of this kind occurred near one of the stations near here. An Indian woman died in a tent, and when the Indians were ordered to take the body away they threw it out upon the adjacent tundra and left it as food for birds of the air and beasts of the field. Sells all kinds of Black Silk at Whole- sale priée. A good Black Silk, wide width, at$1.25. Send cash with order. and express will be paid to any part of Canada. 35 COLBORNE ST- .A.- B. I'll-INT A- B-WI'I-IN'I.‘ 35 GOLBORNE ST. A- :3. rLINT' Sells all Colors in Velveteens. Our 65 cent Black Louis Velveteen is worth 90 cents a. yard. Send for a Dress length, and see for ourseli. All kinds of Dress Goods kept In stock. You can save $1 a pair on good Lace Curtains, by sending an order to 35 COLBORNE ST- A- B- I'll-INT is the only wholesale man in Canada selling to consumers direct, and cash will be returned 1! goods are not as re- presented' 35_chBORNE ST- A. B. FLINT, - TORONTO. self. Sells Black Cashmere at Wholesale Price. Our 50 cent French Blue-Black Cashmere is worth 67% cents. Send for 8 91: 10 yards as sample, and see for your- Sold by all Dru gists and Dealers. Direct 0113 in 11 languages. The Charles A. Vogeler Co. ‘MIon-I m A. voazum. a co.) THE GREATGERMAN R E M EDY RH EU MATISM, Neuralgla. Sciatica, Lumbago, BACKACIIE, HEADACHE, TOOTHAGHE. SURE THROAT, QUINSY, SWELLINGS. SPRAINS, ® Soreness, Cuts, Bruises. . FROSTBITES, BURNS, SCALns, And all other bodily when and pains. FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE. FOR PMN: Relieves and cures ...... ........81000 00 .. 1000 00 . . . . 1000 00 sh Mqvement; 800 00 mun-m. lid“ U B. A. 200 00 400 00 1000 00 (300 00 25m) 00 1000 00 143 Filipt,‘i‘fl_a_lln ni‘liigsffilgjr'ogjaegfi It I: (zeriulnly {he fiat inaxiper I ever saw. neat, plnlu, lnstructlve and beautifully Inn-trutgd. E. L. HOTE. IgnerN, o ' , A113. 3, 71883. I have Inn y been in subscriber to your tasty and px-ufiduhle paper, and must say I am nun-e than pleased with it. I gave my sublerlptlnn, in the first place, more to have a chance for one ofthe many presents than for anything contained In the paper; but I find the paper is \vorth three or four times ihe money beside all presenln. S. \V. I‘AISLEY. PQRT‘SAMO‘UTII. v5" _J_u_1y 9,_ 1sss_. l rerelved the papers all run“: and am de- lighted. My frlends and subscribers saythey are surprlsed at its slze and beauty. Every person that has seen the paper acknowledge- it to he the beut paper prlnted, and say It In worth $2 per year. TIMOTHY MOSELEY. ACRES OF LAND FOR SALEâ€" Every man has one chance in his 1i.e,â€"- here it is for some one. Lot 33, con. 11. lot con. 12. trrwnsbip of Howick, on the town line between Minto and Ho wick. Terms $1,009 with $1,500 cash down, balance at 6 per cent on time to suit purchaser. This is a. genuine bargain Aggy pgrsgnqlly or by letter to F. S. Dobson, Early Amber Cane Seed imnorted from the Southern States. Send for catalogues and prices. Cl'iffcird' P.'0.. 06c. New 36,9501: $011091 Desks- A M B‘E’R‘SUfiKfiflflKN}: PINATIBN REMEDY ‘ Offered 353 speedy and certain cure, a: iunrlreds afilic‘led \ th every form ofdlscasc have been restored to compch health by its use, after all other remedies failetL The Iccupcrative powers of this medicine are truly astonishing. and. in troubles arising from iniprudcncc, its continued use for a short time changes the languid, debilitated condition. lo one of renewed lit. and vigour. Forwzirdcd to any address, on receipt of price, Two Dollars per packageâ€"sufficient for one month’s treatment. '- M. FINDLAY 8: CO.. BOX 497 Toromh‘ HO U SAN D5 of youn M cu and Womenâ€"married and single. - through the cfl‘ccts o vicious youthful habits, or excessive in~ dulgence In later years, have so undermined their general SySlCflh as to induce almost every other disease, and the rculcausc ofthcse' t‘roublcs_12cillg scnfqelyf: ' sxisygcctcd. this _ are drugg‘d and doctorcd for ever [1 ' EINATIDN REM DY, undreds afilic‘led thh troublcs being scarcely ever suspected. the are dru 'ed and for evexzyllliqg by} thg right one. ‘Tfi "ERHBEE N com- This elegant Medicated Cream is warranted 8. Sure Cure for all l’lmples, Black Spots, Blotches and unsightly Eruptions on the face. neck and arms. 1!; posith’ely removes all such imperfections in a few days, leaving the skin clear and smooth. It will cure the worst case though all other means have failed. For bemultying the complexion it is unrivalled, It makes the skin soft and. white, and removes Tun. Freckles, and Snllowness. This is the only preparation recommended by physicians. warranted perfectly harmless and its use can. not be detected. One aokage lastamonth. Price. (31) one dollar. ‘old by Druggists, or sent by mail in plain wrapper, post-paid, on receipt of price. Sole proprietors for Canada. Address, THE LISPINARD COMPANY They invite and hope to see their patrons, from all whom they solicit orders now for their fall and winter wants in Boltsof every kind. Rivets, Nuts, Spikes, and Threshing Machine Teeth. Immediate specifiqatiops age the only sqfe guards to dehveries 1n tune for due requlre ments. Order now, refer to your price list for the dif- ferent kinds, state distinctly the kinds wanted on each order. SKIN BEAUTIFIER. The Bolt& Iron 00. OF TORONTO, (LIMIT!) I», have REMOVED to their new works, the finest on the Continent, the best equipped with ma- chinery, manned with the most experienced ex« parts, using high quality iron, tested at inter- vals, ensuring guarantees of quality. When ordering throu h merchants ask for thege Bolts ; take no at lcrs, they are the best made. an: respectfully invited to call and inspect our complete and extensive stock of We are offering special inducements in every department. MERCHANTS TORONTO Customers will be furnished with certifi- cates for return tickets at reduced fares. Wm. J. Me‘MAS’l‘ER & 00., Staple and Fancy Dry-Goods. Professor Lispinard’s WGQNEHZEMLA L1 m M. BELTTYfifi soxs, VVcllanll, Out. 4| Front St. West, Toronto. MACHINERY. Box 285. St. Catharines. Ont. engage}; Aug. 21, 1333‘. â€"VI§ITINGâ€"â€"

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